Arab News

Palestinia­ns differ with Arab opinion on US mediation role

Slight majority of Palestinia­ns in occupied territorie­s seem to see no other actor with equal influence over Israeli policy

- Caline Malek Dubai Robert Edwards Erbil Twitter: @CalineMale­k

Palestinia­ns in the occupied territorie­s back US efforts to play a bigger role in mediation with Israel, according to the Arab News/ YouGov panArab survey, putting their view at odds with what a majority of Arabs across the wider region think is best for them.

Of the 2,192 respondent­s polled across 18 Arab countries ahead of the Nov. 3 presidenti­al election, 52 percent said they are against the US playing a bigger role in mediating between Israelis and Palestinia­ns.

Younger people across the region appear especially hostile to a bigger US peace-broker role, with 67 percent of 18-24-yearolds against. By contrast, 61 percent of people over the age of 45 support a bigger role for Washington, indicating a stark generation­al divide.

Opinions also appear to diverge based on marital status, with 62 percent of unmarried people rejecting more US involvemen­t, while 56 percent of people who are married with children voice their support.

By contrast with the Arab region as a whole, 52 percent of Palestinia­ns in the occupied territorie­s support US efforts to play a bigger role in mediating between Israelis and Palestinia­ns, with the remaining 48 percent against. “One of the reasons why you see the Palestinia­ns looking for US involvemen­t is because they believe the US is one of the few countries in the world that has influence over Israel and can help pressure it in the context of the peace process,” Will Wechsler, director of Middle East programs at the Atlantic Council, told Arab News in response to the findings. Many observers in the Arab world appear to blame the Palestinia­n leadership for the lack of progress, accusing them of failing

to take advantage of opportunit­ies when presented.

“The Palestinia­n leadership itself is also becoming less and less positively viewed, not just by the leaders in the Arab world, but by the Palestinia­ns themselves,” Wechsler said.

“If you look at recent polls in Israel, what you see is widespread disillusio­n with the peace process. Similarly, with the Palestinia­ns and the rest of the Arab world, there’s not a lot of hope that the process will improve anytime in the near future.”

In a three-part interview that he recently gave to Al Arabiya, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the former Saudi ambassador to the US, blamed the Palestinia­n leadership for a catalogue of failures and wasted opportunit­ies through the decades, especially between 1978 and 2015.

One reason why wider

Arab publics do not support US efforts to play a bigger role in IsraeliPal­estinian mediation could well be President Donald Trump’s decision in 2018 to move the US Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

Some 89 percent of respondent­s in the survey opposed the embassy move, while just 11 percent approved.

The decision was widely seen as a blow to the Palestinia­n vision of establishi­ng their own capital in East Jerusalem. Furthermor­e, the Trump administra­tion has not explicitly condemned the constructi­on of additional units in illegal Israeli settlement­s in the occupied West Bank, regarded by many as counterpro­ductive to the goal of establishi­ng a viable, independen­t Palestinia­n state. Despite their apparent frustratio­n with the glacial pace of mediation, a large proportion of those surveyed still believe the next US administra­tion should consider finding a solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict a high priority.

Equal numbers of respondent­s (44 percent) across the region said solving the Israel-Palestinia­n conflict and empowering young people should be the focus of the next US president.

These feelings were especially pronounced in North Africa, where 48 percent placed the Palestinia­n question at the top of their wish list of priorities for the next administra­tion.

Nadim Shehadi, an associate fellow at Chatham House, said there is a strong appetite for peace, but not without “some form of justice” for the Palestinia­ns. “It can be achieved very easily because a two-state solution is one step away,” he added. “A state of Palestine can be achieved very easily if there’s no US veto, with preparatio­n for some minimal negotiatio­ns with Israel. The state of Palestine already exists; it was declared in 1988 and recognized by 139 countries. Kosovo was admitted into the ( UN) General Assembly with a lot less.”

Shehadi said the prospects for peace will depend on what is actually on offer — not on who sits in the White House or which party forms the next administra­tion, as both the Democrats and Republican­s have a “bad track record” on Palestine.

“The Trump administra­tion achieved a huge step, but it will be wasted if it’s not followed up with an initiative that gives a sense of overall solution,” Shehadi added. “The key is the Arab Peace Initiative. It’s within reach.”

The Arab Peace Initiative, drafted by Saudi Arabia in 2002, offered the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties in exchange for Israel making a statehood deal with the Palestinia­ns and withdrawin­g to the pre-1967 borders.

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 ?? AFP ?? Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas speaking at the UN Security Council. Below: Israel PM Benjamin Netanyahu.
AFP Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas speaking at the UN Security Council. Below: Israel PM Benjamin Netanyahu.

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